Quarterback Andrew Luck showed off his skills for NFL scouts, then shared his thoughts on the draft Thursday at Stanford’s Pro Timing Day.

Luck, the star attraction of the workout — and the reason it was broadcast live by ESPNU and the NFL Network — said he has had multiple conversations with the Indianapolis Colts, who own the No. 1 pick, and has met the Washington Redskins, who pick second.

Redskins coach Mike Shanahan and owner Daniel Snyder attended Stanford’s pro day, along with representatives from the Colts and dozens of other NFL scouts and executives.

“I’m still very focused on making myself better,” Luck said. “Sure, you want to go No. 1. But I’m preparing myself for the NFL. That’s my focus, and it hasn’t been hard to stay on that path.”

Luck had little to say about the Colts’ decision to release Peyton Manning — “They had to do what the club felt was the best move for them” — or the perceived competition with Baylor’s Robert Griffin III to be the first player selected.

“It’s a long process,” he said. “The draft isn’t for another month. A lot can happen.”

Luck spent most of the Pro Timing Day workout watching his draft-eligible Cardinal teammates run the 40-yard dash and perform agility drills on Stanford’s artificial turf practice field.

His workout was directed by his throwing coach, George Whitfield, and featured four familiar faces: Stanford running back Jeremy Stewart, receivers Chris Owusu and Griff Whalen and tight end Coby Fleener, a potential first-round pick.

The patterns were taken from Stanford’s playbook and had been rehearsed by Luck and his receivers before Thursday’s session.

“It was interesting to look back at the quarterback and see a wall of people behind him,” Fleener said of the hundreds of reporters, scouts and university personnel, including professor Condoleezza Rice.

Smiling often and appearing relaxed despite gusts of wind, Luck threw 50 passes, of which 46 were caught and three were dropped. The intent was to highlight Luck’s arm strength, accuracy and mobility. At various points, Whitfield used a broom to simulate pass rushers and force Luck to throw on the move and across his body.

“The fact that this kid’s willing to come out here in this kind of element … tells you a lot,” analyst Mike Mayock said on the NFL Network’s broadcast. “I can’t underscore this enough. We’re outdoors on a windy day, he made two bad throws to start, and now he’s fine.”

Luck ended the session by effortlessly throwing a 70-yard strike to Owusu, who dropped the pass.

“I wanted to show I can make all the throws,” Luck said. “A lot of throws you have a chance to complete (in the NFL) will be from awkward positions.”

Luck said he purposely threw some passes high or behind his receivers to give them a chance to showcase their ability to make difficult catches.

NFL scouts were not made aware of his intentions, he said.

Luck is not currently in school but will return for the spring academic quarter and is on schedule to earn his degree (in architectural design) in June.

Offensive tackle Jonathan Martin, a projected first-round pick, said he will visit Buffalo, Minnesota and Cleveland in coming weeks.

A transit village with apartments, retailers, restaurants and a hotel is rising in Milpitas next to The Great Mall, close to light rail and the under-construction BART station. It’s one of several Silicon Valley projects sprouting up near transit.